Kütahyacity, western Turkey. It lies along the Porsuk River, at the foot of a hill crowned by a ruined medieval castle.

Kütahya, known as Cotyaeum in antiquity, lay on the great road from the Marmara region to the Mesopotamian plains; the town flourished and declined according to the changing importance of the trade routes. As a medieval Byzantine town, it was taken by the Seljuq Turks toward the end of the 11th century. It functioned as the capital of the Germiyan Turkmen principality from 1302 to 1429 before its absorption into the Ottoman Empire. During the 16th century, Kütahya emerged as a centre of the Ottoman ceramic industry, supplying tiles and faience for mosques, churches, and other buildings in Turkey and parts of the Middle East. Its importance was eclipsed by the growth of neighbouring Eskişehir at the end of the 19th century, but the development of industries at Kütahya in the mid-20th century restored some of the town’s former importance.

The city’s old neighbourhoods have traditional Ottoman houses made of wood and stucco. Its industries now include sugar refining, tanning, nitrate processing, pottery and carpet making, and the manufacture of smoking pipes and other articles from meerschaum (silicate of magnesium), which is extracted in the vicinity. Kütahya is linked by road and railway with Eskişehir (40 miles [65 km] northeast) and Afyon Karahisar (56 miles [90 km] southeast). The city’s old neighbourhoods have traditional Ottoman houses made of wood and stucco.The area in which Kütahya is situated contains extensive areas of level or gently sloping agricultural land culminating in high mountain ridges to the north and west. Its The region’s products include cereals, fruits, and sugar beets. Large deposits of lignite are extensively worked at Tunçbilek and Değirmisaz, and stock raising is important. Pop. (2000) city, 166,665; (2013 est.) 224,898.